Scripsit Dylan Thurston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Just one more comment: the versions of both of these two essays > available on gnu.org (at http://www.gnu.org/gnu/linux-and-gnu.html and > http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-free.html) have a slightly different > license:
> Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is > permitted in any medium, provided this notice is preserved. > Notably, "without royalty" is missing. That does not make any difference. Since the notice you quote does not demand any royalty, no royalty is demanded. (It is phrased as an unconditional permission to do foo, so it must be an unconditional permission to do foo). The reason why people often write "without royalty" in their free licenses is solely to clarify; it does not change the legal contents of the license. But you're right that none of the notices you quote describe DFSG-free licensing terms. Feel free to join the ongoing quasiflamewar in the LGPL thread about the degree to which we care about that in the case of Stallman's essays. -- Henning Makholm "The compile-time type checker for this language has proved to be a valuable filter which traps a significant proportion of programming errors."